Hi Cheez and piano_ex,
thanks for your views and detailed discussion! I know I would learn a lot from you guys!
The book is titled "Great Pianists Speak" which consists of interviews of a number of classical pianists by Adele Marcus published in 1979. The one whom I quoted from is Jorge Bolet. As Cheez did, he also thought that people over pedal. He thought that besides the pedal, fingers and wrists strength helps in providing the tones of the playing.
Yes, piano_ex, the book is old but not that old. What a great observation by you! Bolet just didn't mention it in that paragraph.
I agree Cheez, the effect of using the different pressure in pedal is much greater in the grand piano that I laid my hands....opps, in this case, foot on! I experimented with different pressure of pedaling in digital ones too before I came across this book. I thought it was unorthodox since nobody ever talk to me on the pressure of pedaling, so I didn't dare to tell anyone! :mrgreen:
What piano_ex is true, different instruments at different places sound differently with the pedal. So, one gota adjust accordingly.
I will try not using the damper in string/organ voice, as Cheez suggested. Korgs are merciless if I missed the pedaling on string/organ voice. Yamahas aree much more gracious! Hahaha....thanks for the tip Cheez! A few pianists in the book also talked about finger pedaling, which I supposed is what Cheez described.
It's super interesting to see the classical pianists (various nationalities, but mostly touring in america but educated in Europe) share about their experiences! A little book review as follows, they talked about:
-finger pedaling,
-using the 3 pedals (Karl Ulrich Schnabel said in the book that he wrote "Modern Techniques on Pedaling", is that the book you said, piano_ex?),
-practising scales,
-memorising pieces,
-working on new pieces,
-life as concert pianists,
-life as concert pianists their whole life,
-young punks playing Liszt to show off (lol),
-young punks entering competitions and touring before they ground themselves adequately in music,
-revising the competitions age limit to 28 and above (!),
-major competitions should be held once every 3 years or so,
-many pianists are lying when they say they didn't practice (LOL!)
-and many more interesting stuff
List of great pianists interviewed as follows:
1. Gina Bachauer
2. Karl Ulrich Schnabel
3. Claude Frank
4. Jorge Bolet
5. Rudolf Firkusny
6. Alicia de Larrocha
7. Garrick Ohlsson
8. John Browning
This book is entertaining, funny, inspiring and a super fun read! Anybody interested can get it at the National Library after I returned it.